Oh, the poor lonely conservative librarian! What a pitiable figure. Or rather, what a pitiful theme he has chosen in which to cast his figure. True, it has a certain stamp of authenticity which one must grant an almost clinical manifestation of a delusional paranoia -- and for which one might actually feel sorry if one didn't know it to be entirely constructed for political effect. However, even though it is just a ploy, it is interesting that this 'martyr' trope is used over and over by these posturing unfortunates: THEY are the_ really_ marginalized when, obviously, it should be someone else, i.e. the left, that is marginal!
In this scenario there is no justice for these righteous yet
biblically beleaguered "conservative" people. So they call out
plaintively for... for whom? They howl in hope that the professional vigilantes will come to their aid, the established and endowed witch-hunters --otherwise occupied perhaps with the schools and universities-- to come and rescue them from their lonely lurking in their ill-deserved oblivion.
The pitch has its appeal : "If your classroom witch-hunt is stalled in academia, we have some new territory for you inquisitors to exploit, somewhere you -- or certainly, your average person -- would never imagine: in your libraries!"
"Spies in the stacks! Treason in Tech Services! Reds in Reference! Anarchy in ALA! " That should be good for a entire series on Fox, for countless diatribes by O'Reilly and Limbaugh and Dr.Laura, for whole conferences of 'Focus on the Family'...
Yes, one can -- mark this, Mr. Durant -- spin it into a whole
cottage industry of paid testimonials of right wing librarians
suffering the martyrdom of Tom Dooley at the hands of godless Communist librarians. A second career for a 'lonely conservative librarian".
This hack piece in the Chronicle is a good start, a dutiful if
predictably feeble attempt to do to American librarianship what David Horowitz is doing to US academia. Durant uses the same tools as Horowitz: distortion, lies, innuendos, false statistics, the creation of straw-men (in fact, in this case, the positing of an entirely made-up _world_ of politicized librarianship as a seething hot-bed of radicalism -- so thoroughly disingenuous that it's almost laughable!). Basing himself on the relative ignorance of the public about the nature of librarianship and the work of librarians, this self-styled 'heretical librarian' takes his best shot at persuading the readers of the CHE and more to the point his true audience of right-wing pundits (who can now quote his lamentable piece in the Chronicle as if it had some authority) that the seemingly benign library world, with its outposts on your very Main Street, has somehow been taken over by Communists who pull the strings of the feeble-minded but well-intentioned rank-and-file librarians of the US and manipulate them into ... well, not Communism (why not? the sky's the limit!) but, just as bad: 'liberalism"! Imagine a liberal
profession! It has to be a conspiracy!
One hopes that the soi-disant "heretical" conservative librarians aren't driven to actual self-immolation in their quest for attention and sympathy. If they are, they should please take it outside the library so they don't burn the books as well as themselves.
Mark Rosenzweig
ALA Councilor at large
> The "overwhelming prevalence" of leftist views among librarians
> has "created a politicized atmosphere of groupthink and
> intolerance," writes David Durant, a self-described
> conservative librarian, in
The Chronicle. If librarians
> are supposed to defend intellectual freedom and diversity of
> opinion, how can they allow their profession to be "a bastion
> of orthodoxy"? Is it appropriate for the American Library
> Association to take stands on political issues, such as a
> recent resolution calling for the United States to leave Iraq?
>
>
Read
> more...>